Nasa unveils map of salt levels in seas around the world which could transform our understanding of weather
It is not so much salt of the Earth as all the salt in the sea.
Nasa
has created the first ever map ever which shows salinity levels in
every ocean on the planet – and it could prove key to understanding
everything from global rainfall to ocean currents.
A satellite orbiting round Earth has been taking specialised radio measurements which have been collated together to form an easy to understand map of the globe.
This Nasa map shows salt levels in the world's oceans and could prove key to understanding everything from global rainfall to ocean currents. In the image, areas in red and yellow have high salinity whilst those in blue and purple have low levels
The data will give scientists a
new level of understanding about climatic patterns such as how
freshwater is moving around, which influences ocean circulation.
The
measurements were collected by NASA’s Aquarius/SAC-D satellite, which
was launched in June this year and is expected to reveal even more
secrets in years to come.
On
the map areas in red and yellow have high salinity whilst those in blue
and purple have low levels. Black marks a gap in the data.
The
differences in salt levels in large oceans like the Pacific and the
Indian ocean are immediately apparent, but there are also other features
like freshwater coming out of the Amazon.
Nasa also said there were interesting contrasts between ‘the arid, high-salinity Arabian Sea west of the Indian subcontinent, and the low-salinity Bay of Bengal to the east, which is dominated by the Ganges River and south Asia monsoon rains’.
Salty: A woman bathes in the Dead Sea, which is
has salinity levels of more than 30 per cent, while Micronesia in the
Pacific, pictured right, was found to have much lower levels of salt by
the study
The satellite works with three
precise radio receivers which record microwave emissions from the
water’s surface - these change depending on the electrical conductivity
of the water, which is related to how much salt there is in it.
Previously
researchers had to use instruments lowered from ships into the water,
which was far more time consuming and limited the amount of data which
could be collected.
Nasa will now be able to make monthly maps with far more accuracy.
Ocean salinity is measured in grams of salt per kilogram of sea water.
The range which is measured is currently only between 32 and 37 parts per thousand, but NASA hopes to get this down to 0.2 parts per thousand, a change of just one millilitre of salt in six litres of water.
Breakthrough: The map created by Nasa could prove key in understanding global rainfall and other weather events, as well as ocean currents and how freshwater moves around the planet
‘Aquarius has exposed a pattern
of ocean surface salinity that is rich in variability across a wide
range of scales,’ said Aquarius team member Arnold Gordon, professor of
oceanography at Columbia University in Palisades, New York.
‘This
is a great moment in the history of oceanography. The first image
raises many questions that oceanographers will be challenged to
explain.’
Aquarius
Principal Investigator Gary Lagerloef added: ‘Aquarius' salinity data
are showing much higher quality than we expected to see this early in
the mission.
‘Aquarius soon will allow scientists to explore the connections between global rainfall, ocean currents and climate variations.’
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Mad Miner, London, 3 years ago
@Zeds: You said - 'As ever you don't actually have any scientific evidence, just an ad hominem attack on NASA.' then in your next post you say 'I didn't ask for scientific evidence, just for evidence.' Stop contradicting yourself when put on the spot, and don't be so lazy, try doing a search using NASA, Obama, Budget and Global Warming for a start. As the saying goes; they are none so blind as will not see. YOU are only interested in seeing that which supports your view, try taking an unbiased viewpoint for a change and it might enlighten you.